At Fixya.com, our trusted experts are meticulously vetted and possess extensive experience in their respective fields. Backed by a community of knowledgeable professionals, our platform ensures that the solutions provided are thoroughly researched and validated.
the stat i`m looking for is 240 volt bi metal, the only number i found is cataloge #9954 A. The heater is eigther high end residential or commercial grade. The control knob is on top of the stat . the stat i`m looking for is 240 volt bi metal, the only number i found is cataloge #9954 A. The heater is eigther high end residential or commercial grade. The control knob is on top of the stat .
You can't post conmments that contain an email address.
- If you need clarification, ask it in the comment box above.
- Better answers use proper spelling and grammar.
- Provide details, support with references or personal experience.
Tell us some more! Your answer needs to include more details to help people.You can't post answers that contain an email address.Please enter a valid email address.The email address entered is already associated to an account.Login to postPlease use English characters only.
Tip: The max point reward for answering a question is 15.
Manual 4 Wire Premium Baseboard/Line Volt Thermostat
Compatible with 120, 240 and 277 vac baseboard heat systems
Simple dial-type mechanical control
Quantity
-
+
store iconPick Up In Store
Unavailable at Guam - Tamuning Check Nearby Stores
package iconWe'll Deliver It to You
UnavailableDelivery is unavailable for this product
Your local store: Guam - Tamuning Store Details & Services
Accessories (1)
Product Overview
The easy-to-install Honeywell Manual Electric Baseboard Thermostat works on 4-wire (double pole) electric heat applications (baseboard or line volt) and allows for simple, worry-free operation. It has a simple dial-type mechanical control and is UL and CSA listed for safety.
You will need Adobe® Acrobat® Reader to view PDF documents. Download a free copy from the Adobe Web site.
Compare Similar Non-Programmable Thermostats
Price
$21.99/each
$24.97/each
$44.28/each
null¢ /null
Name
Double Pole 4-Wire Line Voltage Mechanical Thermostat
Digital Non-Programmable Thermostat
Single-Pole 10.4 Amp 120/240-Volt Digital Electronic Non-Programmable Wall Thermostat in White
Manual Electric Baseboard Thermostat
Brand
Lux
Honeywell
Cadet
Honeywell
Ratings
View ProductView ProductView ProductView Product
Specifications
Dimensions
Product Depth (in.)
1.5
Product Height (in.)
4.5
Product Width (in.)
2.75
Details
Color Family
Whites
Color Family
White
Operation Type
Mechanical
Returnable
90-Day
Shape
Rectangle
Thermostat Product Type
Non-Programmable Thermostat
Thermostat Shape
Rectangular
Thermostat Type
Heat Only
Voltage (v)
110/240v
Voltage (volts)
110/240
Warranty / Certifications
Certifications and Listings
1-UL Listed,CSA Listed
Manufacturer Warranty
1 year limited warranty How can we improve our product information? Provide feedback.
If I have your information right you have a black wire and a white wire marked red coming to the heater with 240 volts between them. You have a double pole unit mounted thermostat with a red and a black wire. Most double pole thermostats have two red and two black wires on them so I am not sure if you have a double or a single pole thermostat.There are also two wires going to the baseboard heater. One is connected to the element the other to a high limit switch which is then connected to the other end of the element. If the thermostat is a double pole the two red (or load) wires should connect one to each of the baseboard wires. The two black (line) wires should connect one each to the two incoming power leads. If it is a single pole thermostat the one red wire should connect to one of the baseboard wires the black should connect to one of the incoming power wires the remaining baseboard and power wires should then be connected together. Hope this helps
Home Depot carries I believe 2 different T-stats , wall mount, and unit mount. Try there. Or you will need to get it touch with the manufacturer. Also have info, 120 or 240 volt.
Using the equation I = P/E where "I" is Amps, "P" is Watts, and "E" is voltage, we find that your 5000w circuit will have an Amperage of 20.83. A 22 amp tstat will work, it will just leave you no room for surges. I would suggest splitting the baseboard and using 2 thermostats. Hope this helps
this heater can usually be wired from either side. meaning your wiring can be brought through the wall inside of one side or the other.
the wiring you bring in to this unit needs to be 12g or larger.
it needs to be on a dedicated circuit. that means you cant splice into any other line. it needs to be for your baseboard heaters alone. that is code and wouldnt want to sleep in a house with baseboard heat that didnt have a dedicated circuit.
baseboard heat is most economical to run with 240v units. 120 is going to cost more to run.
you will need a thermostat either built into the unit or a thermostat unit mounted in the wall to run it.
dont mount the thermastat over the heater. I shouldnt have to explain why.
a 240 volt circuit run from your panel on a 20 amp breaker consists of 3 wires, a ground and a black and white.
in a 240v configuration both the black and white are hot and you must wrap some black tape around the white wire where it shows in your breaker panel and at the handy box in which you have installed the thermostat and then where it enters the heater. this re-designates the wire as a hot instaed of nuetral this gives you to black hots.
you hook the white and black wire to the line in side of the thermostat which should be the two red wires.then the two black load out wires of the thermastat run to your heater. hook your ground (green or bare) to the box if its metal and pig tail it to the ground screw on the thermastat, then out of that pigtail to the heater along with the two hot wires.
you will find a bare ground solid copper wire fixed to the inside connect your ground.
you will find two other wires they are both hots you will connect one of your hots to one of them and the other to the remaining.
what it looks like is an element sitting in the housing the housing is the baseboard and you have a hot wire running through a wire way to the other side and connecting to it and one hot stays on the side you brought the wires to.
in other words since you can wire it from either side you have to have a way to get the energy to one side or the other and they supply a way.
as long as this is labled as a 240 unit both wires are hot. take the covers off both ends you will notice the wire traveling from one side to the other. your goal is to have one hot connected at one end of the fillament and the other hot you brought in to the other end. the best way to hook up multiple heatrs is to have branch lines from the thermastat toeach heater, not to daisychain them one to the other becuase you will have voltage drop as a heater is using it before passing the voltage down the line leading to poorly functioning heaters
You could do it. It would mean serious wiring though and you should use the factory thermostat because it is designed to operate on 240 Volts. Or you could use a remote thermostat at low voltage to throw a relay in the heater and get it to come on. The manual has good diagrams on how it is wired and it would not be too hard to do. IT would operate just like the outside unit on an HVAC system .
I hope you are using a Line Voltage Thermostat!! First, make sure that the power feeding the thermostat is coming from a two pole breaker of the correct amperage (20 amp). If you are using 12-2 wire with ground then please mark the white wire with black tape at each end to identify it as a HOT power source and not a Neutral wire (which is a grounded lead). Do the same for the 12-2 wires feeding the baseboard heater from the Line Voltage Thermostat. The wires from the thermostat (One Black & one White w/black tape) will be wired to each one of the two wires (one Black & one Red or two Black wires) at the baseboard heater. It doesn't matter which wire from the thermostat is wired to which wire at the heater, just as long as there is one wire to one and one wire to the other.(eg. Black from stat to Black at heater/White w/blk. tape from stat to Red at heater OR Black from stat to Black at heater/White w/blk. tape from stat to OTHER Black at heater). I have seen baseboard heaters with two black wires or one black and one red wire. Hope this helps, but if you are confused then please have an experienced tech. do it for you.
the stat i`m looking for is 240 volt bi metal, the only number i found is cataloge #9954 A. The heater is eigther high end residential or commercial grade. The control knob is on top of the stat .
×